Red Paint People

Archaeologists excavate a cemetery of the Red Paint People in Orland, Maine.

Since early colonial times, farmers and hunters knew about the buried caches of red ochre left by the Red Paint People. In at least one case, a thrifty Yankee mixed some of the coloring with seal oil to make a soft, muted paint.

Harvard Archaeologist Charles Willoughby first began documenting the people in 1892 with visits to grave sites in Bucksport, Alamoosook Lake and Ellsworth.

Phillips Andover archaeologist Warren Moorehead built on Willoughby's findings in 1913. Moorehead compared later Indian relics to those found at the cemeteries of the Red Paint People. He concluded they were distinct from the later Indian tribes.

Their tools -- arrowheads, spear points, knives, gouges -- were made differently. And the graves were so old that virtually no human remains existed, just tiny bone fragments.

Presumably, the red ochre (and sometimes yellow ochre) buried in the cemeteries carried some meaning for the people, since it had to be transported quite a distance to be buried. No one, though, has found evidence to show its significance.

Moorehead also theorized that a tidal wave or earthquake may have altered the coast. The ocean then submerged the sites of the Red Paint People's villages, leaving behind only cemeteries located on higher ground.

Carbon dating would eventually prove Moorehead correct about the age of the Red Paint People. However, the idea of the tidal wave has been discredited.

Later Findings

Later archaeologists found places where Red Paint People lived. They concluded they likely were hunters, fishermen and boat builders, as were later occupants of the land. And they know that burial sites containing red coloring have been found elsewhere in the world, including Europe. Those sites may be related to those in Maine.

An archaeologist named Bruce Bourque excavated a village site on the island of North Haven in Penobscot Bay. Years later, as a Bates College professor, he wrote a book calledSwordfish Hunters. In it, he described how the Red Paint People hunted the dangerous and elusive swordfish, and how they created exquisite stone tools and bone ornaments.

But archaeologists still lack answers to questions about the early people who buried red ochre in the ground. They don't know why the Red Paint People disappeared. And they still don't know why the red ochre was so important.

Focused on Old Copper Culuture around the Great Lakes. Interested in sharing with others on OCC, ROP, North Atlantic Maritime Culture, and the European Beaker People. I wonder if they all are the same people in different situation. char bruns

“The Moorehead burial tradition is a long-lived Archaic period burial pattern concentrated within the central Gulf of Maine region. The tradition is characterized by a large number of formal cemetery sites with graves generally lacking bone preservation, but containing a variety of artifacts including gouges, adzes, celts, whetstones, plummets, ground slate points, firekits and flaked stone bifaces, often of elaborated mortuary form. Copious amounts of red ocher in most graves provided the basis for the early twentieth century name, “The Red Paint People, ” at a time when most of the known sites were excavated and largely destroyed. The present research involves reanalysis of most of the known mortuary assemblages, increasing the number of published site assemblages from 25 to 37. Dating has been resolved to some degree, yielding five distinct burial periods spanning 5000 years. Regional analysis of the newly recognized patterns reveals systematic changes in cemetery site location through time, providing insight into mortuary symbolism, settlement structure, the social groups represented by the cemeteries, and culture contact in the Archaic period. The focus on regional analysis in mortuary studies is comparatively recent (e.g., Beck 1995) and in this case was made possible by the relatively high number of site assemblages preserved in the public and private domain.”
-Robinson, Brian S.
1996 A Regional Analysis of the Moorehead Burial Tradition: 8500-3700 BP. Archaeology of Eastern North America 24:95-147.

Native people have been using ochre in New England and eastern North America for thousands of years (at least 8,000 to my knowledge) for ceremonies, offerings, burials, paint and dye. We still use it today for these things. The practice of typology of lithics (stone tools), is so flawed as it doesn’t take into account personal preference of the artist, nor does it leave room for acknowledgement of trade.

They are my ancestors, the Beothuk. I have a small tribe. My DNA matched the Red Ochre people, they are the Beothuk and the same Beothuk of Newfoundland Labrador who were declared extinct in approx. 1829. My grand fathers and uncle were original Beothuk who escaped the genocide. My other grandparents came from Maine and are also of the first New England going back to the pilgrims and Jamestown. My tribe you may find on Facebook: Beothuk Tribe of NFLD & N. America Reservation Nation. Morehead is also correct, some are more recent because my family also came to Maine. I have records, and obituary. Perhaps one day, people will stop the bone digging of my grandfathers and grandmothers and allow me to repatriate their remains and lay them to rest and return our lands that were stole from our people. I am the Red Ochre people/ Beothuk and I am not extinct! Can you imagine if you were me and your grandparents were being dug up from their sacred burial grounds and you are mocked when you tell the world that your DNA proves that you are Beothuk. The Creator is watching and the ancestors are going to be heard what has been done. I am also a Chaplain and a teacher. I want our sacred grounds returned and to repatriate my people. Hear me, Sincerely, Chief Carol Reynolds Boyce (Soolien) of Beothuk Tribe of NFLD and North America Reservation Nation

Godspeed to you and your mission/vision, Chief. I was involved in the Wenatchee Points controversy some decades ago (on the side of the Colville Confederation), and I’m amazed at how little progress has been made since then, both in archaeology and in general. I know from experience there are many non-tribal archaeologists who agree with you, and hopefully one day soon they will add their voices to yours.

Godspeed to you and your mission/vision, Chief. I was involved in the Wenatchee Points controversy some decades ago (on the side of the Colville Confederation), and I’m amazed at how little progress has been made since then, both in archaeology and in general. I know from experience there are many non-tribal archaeologists who agree with you, and hopefully one day soon they will add their voices to yours.

There is a red ochre site with a supposed gravesite in Fremont,NH when Fremont was 11,000 years ago a seaside community. The ocean originally came as far west as Route 125. There was in the 1890’s a large red paint ochre business in Fremont consisting of two or three buildings. Part of the Fremont red ochre site has been turned into a gravel pit but there is still enough of the site left that it should be researched more.

I first heard about them on an episode of PBS’ science series NOVA some time back in the 1980s. I wish we knew more
about them. That actually makes the Red Paint People, not the Native Americans, the First Americans. Since they were here before the Native Americans.